anonymouscaller
10 hours ago
Article highlights a looming issue in the US, but why open the article with an example of a high income earner living alone who is spending beyond her needs? Makes you wonder if the author has some kind of bias...
brianwawok
10 hours ago
Whats the right metric to consider credit card debt bad, or degrees of badness? When looking at nations, we look at debt compared to GDP. So for individuals, it would be debt compared to income? So someone who makes 20k and has a 10k credit card debt, is in the same bucket at someone making 200k with 100k in credit card debt. But, the 100k in debt person is in more trouble than someone who makes 500k and has 200k in debt.
mechagodzilla
8 hours ago
"Household Debt Service Payments as a Percent of Disposable Personal Income": https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/TDSP
LUmBULtERA
8 hours ago
That's the right metric, thank you. And this looks like it's relatively low.
gopher_space
3 hours ago
One interesting metric would be the shrinking percentage of your credit report landlords use to make decisions.
expedition32
8 hours ago
America: if you owe the bank 100 trillion dollars it is the bank that has a problem.
user
8 hours ago
Terr_
9 hours ago
Occam's razor: They wanted an short debt-scenario that reads as somehow unexpected and unusual so that visitors keep reading, versus a true but depressingly-common one.
I mean, I just have to say something like "single-parent slipping further behind each month"... and I bet most of y'all are already familiar enough with the concept that you're imagining it without prompting.
halestock
9 hours ago
The WSJ's target audience is high income earners, so it's more about making a story that appeals to them.
bell-cot
9 hours ago
Possibly. Though these days, I wouldn't be surprised if the WSJ was A/B testing versions with different opening examples, while showing 99% of their audience the current "max. clickiness" one.